This book celebrates the British railway station hotel. It focuses on
those hotels built or acquired by the railway companies themselves
rather than on the many railway or station hotels built by local
entrepreneurs as speculative ventures up and down the country. It traces
the success and failure of some of the early railway hotels but at its
heart are those, such as Glasgow's Central Hotel, the Midland Grand
Hotel at St Pancras or the Royal Victoria Hotel in Sheffield, which
survived the first century of Britain's railways to become part of the
Hotels Executive on the nationalisation of the railways in 1948 and,
later, the British Transport Hotels group. Many of those built by the
railway companies during the Victorian era have survived and continue to
prosper into the twenty-first century. In this book, Michael Patterson
uses a wonderful collection of photographs to share with the reader the
grand architecture of many of the station hotels, the beauty of their
decoration and the vaulting ambition behind their construction.